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An atlas of tissue-specific conserved coexpression for functional annotation and disease gene prediction.

Authors :
Piro, Rosario Michael
Ala, Ugo
Molineris, Ivan
Grassi, Elena
Bracco, Chiara
Perego, Gian Paolo
Provero, Paolo
Di Cunto, Ferdinando
Source :
European Journal of Human Genetics; Nov2011, Vol. 19 Issue 11, p1173-1180, 8p, 3 Diagrams, 1 Chart, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Gene coexpression relationships that are phylogenetically conserved between human and mouse have been shown to provide important clues about gene function that can be efficiently used to identify promising candidate genes for human hereditary disorders. In the past, such approaches have considered mostly generic gene expression profiles that cover multiple tissues and organs. The individual genes of multicellular organisms, however, can participate in different transcriptional programs, operating at scales as different as single-cell types, tissues, organs, body regions or the entire organism. Therefore, systematic analysis of tissue-specific coexpression could be, in principle, a very powerful strategy to dissect those functional relationships among genes that emerge only in particular tissues or organs. In this report, we show that, in fact, conserved coexpression as determined from tissue-specific and condition-specific data sets can predict many functional relationships that are not detected by analyzing heterogeneous microarray data sets. More importantly, we find that, when combined with disease networks, the simultaneous use of both generic (multi-tissue) and tissue-specific conserved coexpression allows a more efficient prediction of human disease genes than the use of generic conserved coexpression alone. Using this strategy, we were able to identify high-probability candidates for 238 orphan disease loci. We provide proof of concept that this combined use of generic and tissue-specific conserved coexpression can be very useful to prioritize the mutational candidates obtained from deep-sequencing projects, even in the case of genetic disorders as heterogeneous as XLMR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10184813
Volume :
19
Issue :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Journal of Human Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
66697088
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2011.96